In the first post regarding animations we have created a bunch of png files and combined them to a single gif animation. Now we want to generate again a bunch of png files, but combine them to a movie.

We create the png files in analogy to the gif example, hence we will discuss only the generation of the movie here. In order to compose a avi file from the png files we are using Mencoder. Gnuplot is able to directly start Mencoder by its system command.

The first two lines check if Mencoder is available and quit gnuplot if not. The Mencoder command itselfs gets the directory containing the png files mf://animation/*.png, frames per second and input type-mf fps=25:type=png, video -ovc and audio -oac options, and finally of course the output file -o huygen.avi.

In order to generate a webm video file for a web site, ffmpeg can be used to convert the video.

For presentation or teaching purposes it can be useful to show not only a figure, but an animation to illustrate something more clear. There exists different possibilities to do this in Gnuplot. Today we will have a look at how to create a gif animation.

Fig. 1 shows a gif animation of a Bessel function of first kind and zeroth order. Gnuplot has a gif output terminal, but the result will be smoother if we first create png files with Gnuplot and then the animated gif file with another program. In order to create a set of png files we have to loop through the time value t and different output files.

The above code sets a start value for the running time variable t and the end_time variable at which the looping should be stopped. Then a folder for the output png files is created and the loop file bessel.plt is loaded. The content of this loop file is shown below.

Here we update the time t, create a file name with a different number and plot out Bessel function. Finally the last line checks if our time t is smaller than the end_time variable, and executes the loop again if this is the case.

After we have created the png files in the animation folder, we start GIMP and load all the files as layers (File > Open as Layers). After this we save all layers together as an animated gif file.